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Friday, March 28, 2008

European stance on Illegal, Warrantless Wiretapping


~ Their has been Global outrage, admittedly from free-thinking, liberal individuals, and civil rights activists, about the recent scandal about the U.S' Illegal, Warrantless Wiretapping program, which has 'officially' stemmed from the Clinton administration, but more recently with George W. Bushs' obsession with Muslim fundamentalists and the American-funded Jihad in general. The World of EyeCeyE questions the reasons for political 'silence' on the subject in Europe; have we got something to hide, perhaps? ~


For Europeans, scolding the Bush administration for everything from Guantanamo to the Iraq War to secret CIA prisons has become a full-time job. But when it comes to the American scandal over President Bush's warrantless wiretaps, there's been a curious reaction from the other side of the Atlantic: silence. Where is the European outrage?

European restraint may arise from a fear of hypocrisy. The fact is that in much of Europe wiretapping is de rigueur—practiced more regularly and with less oversight than in the United States. Most Europeans either don't know about this or, more likely, simply don't care.

The extensive European taps are not new developments, made in the heat of passion after the London and Madrid bombings. European governments have been bugging phones for decades. In theory, the European Convention on Human Rights forbids "arbitrary wiretapping," but, as we've learned in the United States, arbitrary is in the ear of the wiretapper.

The three worst offenders are not countries you would suspect of playing fast and loose with civil liberties: Britain, Italy, and the Netherlands. Italian officials conduct tens of thousands of wiretaps each year. Technically, judicial approval is needed but since judges in Italy are "investigative," meaning they act more like our prosecutors, there is essentially no check on law enforcement's ability to eavesdrop.

In Britain, police have an even easier time tapping phones. The home secretary, a Cabinet minister, approves all wiretaps. Judges have nothing to do with it.

Or, to put it in American terms, imagine Homeland Secretary Michael Chertoff authorizing wiretaps of anyone he deems fit—only without the pesky questions from the media and Congress.

Gus Hosein, an analyst with Privacy International, calculates that, given the number of wiretaps in the U.K., the home secretary approves a new wiretap every few seconds. "Obviously, it's impossible to give it the attention it needs," says Hosein. Britain did recently establish an Interception of Communications Commissioner, but he has limited authority; his main job is tallying the number of annual wiretaps. The only Brits safe from wiretapping are members of Parliament, though after the London bombing, there is now a move afoot to revoke their immunity.

Britain's lax attitude toward telephone privacy dates back to the 1920s, when the British government owned the phone company. There was no need for court approval of wiretaps, since, in a way, the government would be asking itself for that approval.

The Netherlands has the highest rate of wiretapping of any European country—a surprising fact, given the country's reputation for cozy coffee bars, not invasive police tactics. Dutch police can tap any phone they like, so long as the crime under investigation carries at least a three-year jail term.

Washington's biggest European critic—France—also has a serious wiretapping habit, as Marc Perelman points out in Foreign Policy: "In addition to judicially ordered taps there are also 'administrative wiretaps' decided by security agencies under the control of the government." Perelman argues that most French know about these policies but don't seem to care, despite clear cases of abuse in the past. Most prominent is the Elysée Scandal—named after the palace where the late President Francois Mitterrand set up an undercover listening room. Mitterrand's operatives tapped the calls of his political enemies: lawyers, businessmen, journalists, and even the actress and Chanel model Carole Bouquet. This took place in the mid-1980s but only surfaced recently, and 12 conspirators were brought to trial. What's interesting—and disturbing—about the Elysée Scandal is that at the time, French authorities had justified the surveillance as a necessary tool to fight terrorism.

In 2006, in one of the more bizarre cases of Euro-tapping, Greek officials acknowledged that 100 cell-phone lines were tapped during the 2004 Athens Olympic Games. Oddly, all those targeted were involved with national security, including Prime Minster Kostas Karamanlis. Vodafone, the mobile phone company, learned of the wiretapping when customers complained they were not receiving their messages and calls. An investigation revealed that someone had installed spy software. It's not clear who was tapping the phones or why.

European police aren't listening only to conversations; now they have access to other details of phone use. In December, the European parliament approved new rules requiring telecommunications companies to retain customers' telephone and Internet records for up to two years. The directive passed in record time, despite objections from phone companies and Internet providers (all that record-keeping is expensive), as well as privacy advocates. This means that European authorities can tell not only what was said in a phone call, but who was on the other end and where they were located. The United States lobbied hard for this new EU policy, even though telecommunications companies in this country are under no such record-keeping obligation.

When it comes to consumer information, Europeans guard their privacy much more fiercely than Americans do. European companies can't legally share most consumer information, and cases of identity theft are much less common.

So, why are Europeans so nonchalant when it comes to government eavesdropping? One reason is that sometimes it works. When Osman Hussain, a suspect in the botched July 21 London bombing, fled Britain, police traced his journey—across the United Kingdom to France and then Italy, where he was arrested—by tapping his cell phone.

There is a cultural explanation, too. Europeans tend to trust their private information with governments, not corporations. So, while they wouldn't dream of divulging their credit card number to a telemarketer they will gladly hand it over to a government clerk. The state is seen as more benevolent than those greedy, Americanized corporations.

And Europeans have no equivalent to the American Constitution, which enshrines the right of individuals to be free from government coercion. Privacy International's Hosein draws on this constitutional tradition when he explains why Europeans don't bristle at wiretapping that would appall Americans. In Europe, he notes, there are plenty of pressure groups fighting for the rights of consumers, but very few lobbying on behalf of citizens. There is no European equivalent of the ACLU, pushing back against government intrusions. So, next time you're in Europe, feel free to hand out your credit card number willy-nilly. Just be careful what you say on the phone.

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Arthur C. Clarke R.I.P


March 19th 2008

VISIONARY science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke died today in Sri Lanka at the age of 90.

He died of respiratory complications and heart failure that doctors ascribed to a post-polio syndrome, which had kept him in a wheelchair for years.

Born in Somerset, England on December 16 (EyeCeyE's Birthday) 1917, Clarke served in the Royal Air Force as a radar specialist during World War II and graduated from Kings College, London in physics and mathematics after the war.

Clarke is credited with first having the idea for geosynchronous satellites in a landmark technical paper published in 1945. Today the geostationary orbit at 36,000 km (22,370 miles) above the equator is named The Clarke Orbit by the International Astronomical Union and is well populated with communications satellites.

More recently, he promoted construction of tethered space elevators as more efficient means to reach Earth orbit. He had lately predicted that space tourism would become very popular and that man would travel beyond Earth orbit and the Moon to the planets and beyond.

In the 1940s he predicted that man would land on the Moon before the year 2000. His prediction was initially ridiculed as preposterous but his vision was vindicated when US astronauts touched down on the moon in 1969.

The prolific author produced about 100 science fiction books and hundreds of short stories and articles during his writing career. He was best known for writing the stories behind the films "2001: A Space Odyssey" and "2010: The Year We Make Contact" and advising the movie productions. Tens of millions of people all over the world have watched those films over the years and they are regarded by many as among the greatest movies ever made.

With an uninterrupted writing career spanning more than 60 years, Clarke was regarded as one of the "Big Three" science fiction writers, alongside Russian born Isaac Asimov, who died in 1992, and US native Robert Heinlein, who died in 1988. He based his writing on scientific facts and theories rather than fantasy and kept humanity and its consciousness, evolution and ultimate destinations central to his technologically themed works.

Clarke moved to Sri Lanka, which was then called Ceylon, in 1955 and spent most of the rest of his life there.

In observing his "90th orbit of the Sun" in December, Clarke expressed three birthday wishes: for ET to call, for man to kick his oil habit and for peace in Sri Lanka. He finished proof-reading the galleys of his latest novel "The Last Theorem" only days ago.

He is survived by his brother, who is travelling to Colombo for the funeral later this week. In his final instructions, Clarke explicitly requested a private, secular funeral, with "Absolutely no religious rites of any kind."

May he transit among the stars in peace.

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Thursday, March 20, 2008

IRA Bombing Victims are Remembered!


A memorial event has been held to remember those who were killed and injured in the IRA bombing of Warrington town centre 15 years ago.
Tim Parry, 12, and Johnathan Ball, three, died and 56 people were hurt in the explosions on 20 March 1993.

Town leaders, representatives of local organisations and the community have paid tribute to the victims.

Flowers were laid at the site in what has been called a celebration of peace by Warrington Borough Council.

The two bombs, which had been placed in litter bins, went off in Bridge Street - an area packed with shoppers, many looking for Mother's Day gifts.

Johnathan had been in the town with his babysitter to buy a card for his mother.

Quite why they chose this town was beyond comprehension - I didn't know then and I still don't know now. ~ Colin Parry

Tim, an avid Everton fan, had been shopping for football shorts when he caught the full force of the blast. He died in hospital five days later.

Despite one of the biggest murder investigations ever launched by Cheshire Police at the time, the bombers have never been caught.

On Thursday, a police spokeswoman said: "Two boys lost their lives that day, no-one was brought to justice and our files will always remain open."

In the aftermath of the bombing, Tim's father Colin Parry set up a charity, the Foundation for Peace, which runs educational programmes.

Known locally as the Peace Centre, it has also acted as a support service for people bereaved, injured or traumatized in trouble linked to Northern Ireland.

Mr Parry said: "There was absolutely no reason why a town such as Warrington should be hit by the IRA.

Colin Parry has campaigned for conflict resolution:

"Quite why they chose this town was beyond comprehension. I didn't know then and I still don't know now."

Despite being forced to deal with the tragedy of losing his son, Mr Parry said the bombing had a "significant" impact on the peace process in Northern Ireland.

"I think it was that event in Warrington that compelled the Irish government to sit down with the English government in a way they had never considered before," said Mr Parry.

"That's when change began to happen and all of that, in my opinion, was changed by Tim's and Johnathan's deaths."

Rev Steven Kingsnorth, of the Warrington Borough Ministry, said the town had worked hard to turn the tragedy into something positive.

"We made a mark in saying we will not let death and evil have the last word and I think that legacy remains," said Mr Kingsnorth.

"There are still people in the community who look back sadly at the day but still remember the good things that came out of it."

The service on Thursday was seen as a chance to reflect and give thanks to those in Warrington involved in helping to rebuild the town.

Council leader Ian Marks said: "Warrington is united in its thoughts and prayers as we reflect on the events of 15 years ago and pay tribute to those who lost their lives and were deeply affected."


~Finally the media remember a perfect example of real terrorism, not just, government-endorsed propaganda which does nothing but 'incite racism'. Yes, the IRA frequently bombed our country for no apparent reasons other than to terrorise us into relinquishing our ownership over Northern Ireland. How did it affect our air travel? How did it affect our freedoms and civil liberties as a whole? How did it affect law and changes to the law system? Well, It didn't because 'terrorism' wasn't a 'global epidemic' then, it didn't have the backing of Republican America, therefore, we did not rise to the terrorism and we did not resort to animalistic, primal fear. So please remember that next time, an appropriately timed, Al Jazeera leaked 'Osama' film appears in the media, or George W. Bush informs us who is an 'evil-doer' and 'anti-democratic' in future.~

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Introducing the Dogs Of War!

Hundreds of these 'war dogs' (see film below) will be ready to go to war soon. From a bunker back in Virginia, the controller deciding which targets the dog has sighted are worthy kills won't be using a keyboard or a mouse. He or she will be able to think where the war dog goes and who it kills. Bluetooth in the brain. With the help of its distant instructor, it will learn over time to decide for itself when to kill.( I very much doubt that it will be able to decide on the right target when the U.S troops themselves frequently cause, so-called friendly fire on our British soldiers in Iraq, how the hell can a robot decide?!)

All these things were science fiction, today, next year, they are reality.

I'm still not sure which demonstration is more disturbing. The hopping test, where it shows it can easily leap a wall. Or the rock test, where it just keeps coming at you. You can't kick it over. If you manage to knock it down, it will just get back up again, and they are designed to carry weaponry up to 300Ibs in weight.

i09 has a few more clips of the 'war dog'. Creepy stuff indeed if you feel uneasy about the rise of robot armies. Watch it coming through the woods, and righting itself after slipping on ice. It looks like it was modeled on two men bending over from the waist, facing each other. These clips are already a year or two old. Do you wonder what it's capable of doing now?

I am still eagerly awaiting future footage of the War Dogs carrying weaponry. The major problem with this type of technology is that the user, will kill people without any feelings of guilt, or appropriate decision-making. It will be as surreal as playing a video game on the Xbox 360! But if they plan on 'teaching' the robots to kill autonomously, then even more 'innocent civilians' will be killed in the future. Does anyone remember AMIE, the automated robot dog in the film, RED PLANET? The robot malfunctioned and killed all the allies. How many innocents will have to die before they remove them from the war, and what if they go missing? Or what happens if, or when, they are stolen by the enemy? Will we see terrorist suicide bombing war dogs? Can't wait!

That buzzsaw sound can easily slip into your nightmares. Welcome to the future of War!



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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Saddam Hussein Hanged for Crimes Against Humanity

(Right - an innocent child hit by a U.S bomb in Iraq)

This is another chance to watch the full unedited version of Saddam Hussein being hanged for Crimes Against Humanity.

Now he has received the full punishment of the law, how about we start discussing other Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes in general? Why is it that George W. Bush, Tony Blair, and the US/UK sanction regime, in general, get off 'scot-free' from their crimes against humanity and war crimes? Especially as it has now been firmly established that the Iraq War was (or is) illegal, and immoral, not to mention completely out of control. There was little reporting in the press about how the Americans on a number of occasions prevented aid, water and vaccines into Iraq (and Afghanistan),at a time when they were dying in droves from diseased water supplies. Despite this, they blamed Saddam for not complying with the United Nations. You do not punish the innocent civilians when trying to attack a brutal tryrant!

It is apparent that there is one law for one (usually Westernised, Christian leaders), and one law for another (those who read the Qu'ran or are sitting on valuable Oil reserves)? I do not believe that hanging is necessarily deserved for either party, but some acknowledgment that their (US/UK) decision was flawed, and, as in the picture above, innocent people have most definitely suffered.

Saddam Hussein was tried for Crimes against Humanity, mainly because of the mass gassing of the Kurds in the late eighties, but a year after the gassing in 1989, the U.S made the political decision that it was better for foreign relations (meaning for the price of Oil) to continue the pleasantries between them and Iraq, and subsequently, lifted the ban on loans to the country! A bit hypocritical I am sure you will agree, and highlights that there was clearly an ulterior motive behind their attack on Iraq. That combined with the lack of evidence for the Weapons of Mass Destruction (remember when there was little else talked of, in the media?) and you have a clearer picture of the truth. The alleged 'relations' between Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein have been proven completely false, and quite the opposite, with Al Qaeda posing a direct threat potentially to Saddam's regime.

I guess everyone needs a scapegoat?! Especially when 'terrorism' was so desperately 'needed' to allow the American Oligarchy to be fully established as the world's leaders and the world's police force. When you are becoming unfavourable in the eyes of the citizens, one option of escape is to 'incite fear'. And here we are, a world terrified of terror, well, I'm sorry, but I am NOT scared! I was far more afraid of a real threat from terrorism, such as when we were frequently terrorised by the IRA in the U.K. I remember the bombs, but for some reason, there was no hysteria compared to the 'Al Qaeda hysteria' that is rife nowadays in the Western world. I do not fall for the propaganda, sorry! I also remember that the British government adopted a low-key, non-panic attitude. In 1996 the Arndale Centre in Manchester was bombed at a cost of £411 million, and still nothing compared to the very minor threat posed by the Al Qaeda regime. Why?!

Maybe, like the Russian blogger (see below) this article will be classed as 'inciting hatred' and I could be sent to prison for speaking for the masses, then so be it! I am not a sheep, and I will not 'shut up' for your sakes, I will fight for justice, no matter the cost, and I believe in Freedom of Speech! The truth is that the hatred is already there, and if the U.S continue stomping on the rest of the world's toes, with their mega-lo-maniacal, hegemonious, 'neocon' fundamentalist attitudes, they will have very few friends indeed, just like Saddam, in the end. See the article below entitled,'American Global Hegemony in Crisis!', which discusses how the self-titled SuperPower need to diversify in order to sustain their control, other wise, they risk committing political suicide!

We need to start opening our eyes to who the 'good' and 'evil' guys really are, and stop listening to the puritanical Christian rhetoric, which we are subjected to on a daily basis. Depending on who is more favourable 'politically', or more likely, 'economically', the subject in question changes from 'good' to 'evil' to quickly sway public opinion, and it works!

I, also, do not support Islamic fundamentalism either for that matter, as neither are accepting of other faiths, and therefore, other people.

Don't get me wrong, Saddam probably deserved his fate for the gassing of innocent civilians, and I cannot justify bio-chemical warfare in any shape or form, but if he receives the judgment of death for his crimes, and across the pond (in the U.S) the leader receives another term in power, something is very, very wrong with the system as a whole! That said, when bio-chemical warfare has been illegal in war since Vietnam, when the U.S troops would tear gas the Vietnames soldiers and open fire when they staggered out blindly, Why do the U.S troops in Iraq have C.S gas cannisters?!? (check the index of weapons online at Wikileaks).

For those who patriotically fight for their country regardless, out of blind and ignorant loyalty, then please, enjoy the following film...

David Kelly R.I.P

((Viewer Discretion Advised - 18yrs+))


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Britain To Begin Body-Searches in Schools!


Government U-turn over security signals attempt to get tough on teenagers who carry weapons.

Parents will be told that they must allow their children to be searched at any time within school premises if they want to get them into the schools of their choice, under new plans to rid Britain’s classrooms of the scourge of knives.

The Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, will put the battle against illegal weapons at the top of her agenda when she unveils her Tackling Violence Action Plan tomorrow. The blueprint for tackling knife-related violence will include a radical move to give police hundreds of metal detectors to catch young people carrying hidden weapons in schools, clubs and pubs.

The proposal to introduce “airport-style” security, particularly in schools identified as facing the greatest danger from the knife-crime epidemic, represents a remarkable U-turn for the Government, which had previously dismissed the idea as an overreaction.

But the proposals will also shift more responsibility on to parents, with a plan to make them sign up to tougher scanning and searching policies as a condition of entry when their children first apply for a school place.

~ This is yet another case of the government failing to address the REAL PROBLEM, and that is why do kids want to carry knives? Stop blaming the computer games, and the rap artists, and start remembering the function of the body politic. Searching school children is only going to make them more resentful towards authority, and angry, it will do nothing to resolve the issues facing society today. 'A knife-crime epidemic' is a fiction, it is an over-exaggerated, sensationalist non-truth. A few isolated incidents reported by The Sun or The Daily Mail does not warrant an 'epidemic', but then again, who remembers 'Irish Terrorists'? Its only Muslims nowadays, right?! A war on terror, war on drugs, war on knives, wars for oil, war equals money, money feeds the fat cats, and our children suffer because of it all, somewhere the line needs to be drawn!~ EyeCeyE

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Britain Goes Pre-Crime Crazy!

UK Police Want to Designate Children as Criminals Based on DNA

Mark Townsend and Anushka Asthana
The Guardian - March 17, 2008

Primary school children should be eligible for the DNA database if they exhibit behaviour indicating they may become criminals in later life, according to Britain’s most senior police forensics expert.

Gary Pugh, director of forensic sciences at Scotland Yard and the new DNA spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), said a debate was needed on how far Britain should go in identifying potential offenders, given that some experts believe it is possible to identify future offending traits in children as young as five.

‘If we have a primary means of identifying people before they offend, then in the long-term the benefits of targeting younger people are extremely large,’ said Pugh. ‘You could argue the younger the better. Criminologists say some people will grow out of crime; others won’t. We have to find who are possibly going to be the biggest threat to society.’

Pugh admitted that the deeply controversial suggestion raised issues of parental consent, potential stigmatisation and the role of teachers in identifying future offenders, but said society needed an open, mature discussion on how best to tackle crime before it took place. There are currently 4.5 million genetic samples on the UK database - the largest in Europe - but police believe more are required to reduce crime further. ‘The number of unsolved crimes says we are not sampling enough of the right people,’ Pugh told The Observer. However, he said the notion of universal sampling - everyone being forced to give their genetic samples to the database - is currently prohibited by cost and logistics.

Civil liberty groups condemned his comments last night by likening them to an excerpt from a ’science fiction novel’. One teaching union warned that it was a step towards a ‘police state’.

~This is an outrageous proposal, and one we should insist on boycotting. To pre-judge a childs potential behaviour, be it criminal or not, is an impossible task. What we are talking about is, not only trying to predict events that have yet to occur, but also we are talking about punishing a child for a crime they didn't commit. This is not only pre-crime, which in itself is ludicrous, but it is also yet another situation where thought-crime can become the social and legal norm. What ever happened to 'innocent until proven guilty'? It is simply wrong to even entertain these ideas, and as a nation we are responsible not to sit back and rest on our laurels, we must take action to prevent the 'police state' from taken full control over our freedoms and civil liberties. What the government should be doing with the information is addressing the issues it raises such as problems in the education system, or the family system, and put in place measures to ensure the child receives adequate care and attention and does not commit the crimes, they have so 'wisely' decided the child is going to commit! Not just stick them on a DNA database and wait to lock them up, in the already crowded prison system. As for the stigma attached to those potential criminals, look at what has happened with the ASBO, all it has done is encourage youths to be criminal, they have been stigmatised, and not treated or helped for their problems, which usually are political in nature in the first place. So to the government, if you were doing your job correctly in the first place to address problems in the education system and in family values, and to address poverty at large, most of these juvenile offenders would not be created in the first place.~ EyeCeyE

Monday, March 17, 2008

60's Propaganda film on L.S.D issued by Government

~A ridiculous film on the 'dangers' of L.S.D to try and scare potential 'hippy trippers' from using the drug. Unfortunately, our government has not moved on in terms of educating the people on the 'real' facts of drug use, just take a look at 'TALK TO FRANK'. A hotline intended to provide educative information on drugs for young people. FRANK's advert for Cannabis informs you that your brain will spin around and around and pop out of your skull!? And they wonder why kids continue to ignore their, alleged advice and, more appropriately, warnings. I thought calling themselves FRANK intended to discuss serious issues of drug use in a FRANK and OPEN way, not Patronise the young people who are curious about taking mind-altering drugs (yes, alcohol is one too!). The government will never learn. Anyway here's their 'shocking' film...

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Effects of L.S.D

~This is a short film depicting an interpretation of the visual and audio effects of L.S.D (Lysergic Acid Diethylamide). It is the closest interpretation, I believe, of what you experience under the influence of psychedelic drugs esp. mescaline (peyote cactus), psilocybin (magic mushrooms) and l.s.d.(synthetic). Maybe FRANK should use this video, or maybe its too realistic for them, heaven knows we don't really want to educate children on drugs, just scare them eh?!~

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Big Brother is Watching and SHOUTING!

~ This footage shows the latest ways our Police State is controlling our behaviour and shows how we are being spoken to like little children in order for crime prevention to, allegedly, occur. Not only do we have over 4 million CCTV cameras in Britain, but now they come with LOUDSPEAKERS! This is a ridiculous measure that is totally uncalled for and unnecessary, not to mention a total infringement on our privacy and civil rights. Watch the film, tell me what you think!? What has happened to the U.K? I am ashamed to live in this Country. ~


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Pre-Crime Madness sweeps Schools!


Doctors and teachers are to act as ‘informers’ to target violent offenders BEFORE they strike under controversial new ‘Minority Report’ plans

Doctors, teachers and social workers will be told to act as informers to identify potential violent offenders for monitoring by the police and other agencies.

Ministers hope that by spotting binge-drinkers, drug addicts and young gang members early before they commit serious crimes they can be placed on a national database and steered away from offending behaviour.

The plans have been dubbed the Minority Report powers, a reference to the 2002 Tom Cruise movie in which a futuristic “precrime” police unit uses psychics to arrest and imprison criminals just before they carry out attacks.

But civil liberty campaigners and union bosses warned that such intrusive measures by the Home Office would destroy the relationship of trust between GPs and their patients or social workers and clients.

They would also put professionals at risk of reprisals if they are seen as police informers.

Opposition MPs said recent fiascos involving huge quantities of personal data lost or leaked by the Government raised grave doubts over plans for sharing and swapping private data.

The scheme, outlined in the Government’s latest Tackling Violence Action Plan, will mean redrafting the NHS’s strict privacy protection rules to encourage health staff to share patients’ confidential data as part of “public interest disclosures”.

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Russian Blogger faces Arrest!


MOSCOW (AP) - Prosecutors have charged a Russian blogger who wrote on a popular Internet site that police should be publicly incinerated in what is believed to be the country’s first such case against a blogger.

Savva Terentyev said Wednesday he was charged with inciting hatred in a court in the northern city of Syktyvkar. The charges filed Tuesday stemmed from his posting on a Web forum in February 2007 that criticized police in the wake of a raid on an opposition newspaper.

“They’re trash—and those that become cops are simply trash, dumb, uneducated representatives of the animal world,” he wrote. “It would be good if in the center of every town in Russia … an oven was built, like at Auschwitz, in which ceremonially, every day, and better yet, twice a day … the infidel cops were burnt. This would be the first step toward cleaning society of these cop-hoodlum scum.”

The case comes at a time of growing concerns in Russia that authorities have begun to tighten control over the Internet.

Web logs, online newspapers, chat rooms and other Internet sites have emerged as a vibrant source of critical news and commentary in Russia, compared with much of the national media.

During outgoing President Vladimir Putin eight years in office, much of the once-critical mainstream media has been brought to heel. Major television stations have been taken over by the state, or by state- owned corporations. Reporters often resort to self-censorship fearing retribution by officials.

The RIA-Novosti news agency said Terentyev could face a $12,600 fine if convicted.

Internet experts say Terentyev’s case is the first time criminal charges have been brought against a blogger.

~ This is the beginning of a very slippery slope, and one in which will eventually lead to increasing censorship, fear, and prevention of the freedom of speech. A blogger has every right to his/her opinion, and using litigation such as 'inciting hatred' is no more a crime than a passing remark to a friend on something you disagree with. It is a potential step away from a further removal of civil liberties and human rights in a world suffocating with nanny states, surveillance and total societal monitoring.~

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Sunday, March 16, 2008

American Global Hegemony in Crisis!


American global hegemony - a core reality of the last 50 years - is under threat. Changes within the US, both techno-economic and political, and the rise of genuine alternative power centres are combining to threaten US dominance. Recent developments, especially the ongoing, messy war in Iraq, the failure to deal a telling blow against global terrorism, and the new fragility of the US dollar are all indications of imminent change.

The US ended World War II as the only clear winner. Not only was the US in great shape in terms of industrial, financial and military capability, but other developed nations were in bad shape. Britain was financially wrecked, France, Germany, Italy and Japan were physically devastated, and the Soviet Union was very weak except for its huge land army. The subsequent global hegemony achieved by the US was built on military power expressed by its nuclear deterrent and powerful conventional forces, industrial power increasingly in the form of large corporations, and the central role of the dollar in international economics.

While its nuclear deterrent kept the only real enemy, the Soviet Union, at bay, US industrial power translated into American transnational corporate penetration in an international economy based on the Bretton Woods financial regime. This set the scene for a revitalised global finance system, dominated by American or American-run institutions, including private banks, the IMF and the World Bank. By the mid- 1980s, the mix of transnational corporate activity (now including firms from Japan, Europe and even some less developed nations) and global finance markets were so well developed and integrated the term “globalisation” came to be used to describe the emerging new world order.

By this time US industrial decline was well advanced, with firms from Japan, Europe and the fast developing East Asian “tigers” out-competing American firms in core markets like automobiles, white goods and even computers. Increasingly, however, American corporate activity was shifting into “knowledge-based” production and finance, exploiting the still central position of the US in global financial and institutional (for example WTO) arrangements.

The end of the Cold War in 1990 allowed the US to rethink its global military posture, which was already undergoing constant change to due to rapidly evolving technology. The US military opted for ever more high-technology solutions, and a renewed advance into space, focused around ballistic missile defence.

A series of events have shown the underlying weakness of the US position, now based so firmly on the twin pillars of the central role of the dollar and ever more technology-based global military power. It is telling that this situation parallels the predicament of the previous global hegemon, Britain, which relied more and more on the Royal Navy and sterling to maintain its global role as Germany and the US undermined its industrial leadership at the turn of the century.

First, the increasingly volatile oil supply situation as the US became dependent on Middle East oil (which is likely approaching peak production) led to a long entanglement with Iraq, the last, and ongoing, military phase of which showed the problems with the small, high-tech army policy. Secondly, there is the questionable willingness of the rest of the developed world to support huge US deficits and maintain the strong dollar. This has been exacerbated by the current Bush administration’s fiscal and international relations policies, which indicate a growing unilateralism. That is, the US seems increasingly unwilling, or unable, to accept the global systemic responsibilities of global hegemony.

The Middle East, and especially Iraq, is the prime site of the American dilemma. First, the intention of the Iraq government to opt out of the system where oil markets traded in US dollars in favour of the Euro, announced in November 2000, was a serious blow to the role of the dollar as de facto global currency, with all the privileges that entailed. The way in which the US subsequently invaded Iraq, and the overall failure of the occupation to achieve peace, has greatly damaged US credibility. This has eroded its capacity to form military and diplomatic alliances and may be behind the growing lack of confidence in the dollar, reflected in its volatility over recent times. In effect, with a strong Euro there are now two currencies vying for global primacy.

Whether this erosion of American hegemonic position is structural, and had to happen sooner or later, or was brought about by inept leadership, is debateable. The rise of a united Europe, with a bigger GDP than the US, and the continuing growth surge of China, in themselves present challenges to US supremacy. Furthermore, there are signs that an alliance of less developed countries, led by Brazil, is emerging to challenge the US-based “Washington consensus” which governs global economic relations. It would seem inevitable that the relative position of the US - to a certain extent the result of the extreme exigencies of global war from 1914 to 1945 - would have to decline.

But there can be little doubt that the attitudes of the current American leadership - led by a president heavily influenced by simplistic, religion-based notions and largely run by ideological extremists (known as “neocons”) - has made the possibility of a reconstruction of global conditions around more equitably negotiated arrangements much less likely.

Of course, the need to find global solutions to global problems like climate change, disease and unbalanced economic development demand more than ever a functioning global system. The question is whether the US can step down from its position of unique power and join such a project. After all, American global military reach is undiminished, and provides a powerful card to play. But a century ago the then hegemon, Britain, found that once the basic advantages arising out of economic primacy had gone, hegemony could not be maintained by military power alone.

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

EFF Applauds House Passage of Surveillance Bill with No Telecom Immunity



Bill Would Allow Spying Cases to Proceed Fairly and Securely
Washington, D.C. - This morning the House of Representatives passed a compromise surveillance bill that does not include retroactive immunity for phone companies alleged to have assisted in the NSA's warrantless wiretapping program. The bill would allow lawsuits like the Electronic Frontier Foundation's case against AT&T to proceed while providing specific security procedures allowing the telecom giants to defend themselves in court.

The House bill succeeded 213 to 197 despite the president's threat to veto any bill that does not include immunity.

"We applaud the House for refusing to grant amnesty to lawbreaking telecoms, and for passing a bill that would allow our lawsuit against AT&T to proceed fairly and securely," said Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) Senior Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston. "Amnesty proponents have been claiming on the Hill for months that phone companies like AT&T had a good faith belief that the NSA program was legal. Under this bill, the companies could do what they should have been able to do all along: tell that story to a judge."

The Senate is expected to consider the House bill when it returns from recess on Monday, March 31. House and Senate staff are expected to spend much of the break negotiating over differences between the new House bill and a previous Senate bill that includes immunity provisions.

"This newly-passed House bill represents a true compromise on the amnesty issue: customers whose privacy was violated would get their day in court, while the companies would be allowed to defend themselves despite the Administration's broad demands for secrecy," said EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn. "We look forward to assisting the Senate in its consideration of this compromise solution, which EFF believes is the only reasonable response to the White House's attempt to evade court review of its illegal spying program and the phone companies' collaboration in it."

EFF represents the plaintiffs in Hepting v. AT&T, a class-action lawsuit brought by AT&T customers accusing the telecommunications company of violating their rights by illegally assisting the National Security Agency in widespread domestic surveillance. The Hepting case is the leading case aimed at holding telecoms responsible for knowingly violating federal privacy laws with warrantless wiretapping and the illegal transfer of vast amounts of personal data to the government.


www.eff.org

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

O Captain! My Captain! ~ Walt Whitman

O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done, The ship has weather'd every rack,
the prize we sought is won, The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring; But O heart! heart! heart!
O the bleeding drops of red, Where on the deck my Captain lies, Fallen cold and dead.
O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells; Rise up- for you the flag is flung- for
you the bugle trills,

For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths- for you the shores
a-crowding,
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
Here Captain! dear father!
This arm beneath your head!
It is some dream that on the deck,
You've fallen cold and dead.

My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,
My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will,
The ship is anchor'd safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,
From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;
Exult O shores, and ring O bells!
But I with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.